Tales Of Hearsay eBook

Joseph M. Carey
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 126 pages of information about Tales Of Hearsay.

Tales Of Hearsay eBook

Joseph M. Carey
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 126 pages of information about Tales Of Hearsay.

“She had been made out by several pairs of eyes only a couple of minutes before.  She was lying at anchor very near the entrance—­a mere vague blot on the fog’s brightness.  And the commanding officer by staring in the direction pointed out to him by eager hands ended by distinguishing it at last himself.  Indubitably a vessel of some sort.

“‘It’s a wonder we didn’t run slap into her when coming in,’ observed the second in command.

“‘Send a boat on board before she vanishes,’ said the commanding officer.  He surmised that this was a coaster.  It could hardly be anything else.  But another thought came into his head suddenly.  ’It is a wonder,’ he said to his second in command, who had rejoined him after sending the boat away.

“By that time both of them had been struck by the fact that the ship so suddenly discovered had not manifested her presence by ringing her bell.

“‘We came in very quietly, that’s true,’ concluded the younger officer.  ’But they must have heard our leadsmen at least.  We couldn’t have passed her more than fifty yards off.  The closest shave!  They may even have made us out, since they were aware of something coming in.  And the strange thing is that we never heard a sound from her.  The fellows on board must have been holding their breath.’

“‘Aye,’ said the commanding officer, thoughtfully.

“In due course the boarding-boat returned, appearing suddenly alongside, as though she had burrowed her way under the fog.  The officer in charge came up to make his report, but the commanding officer didn’t give him time to begin.  He cried from a distance: 

“‘Coaster, isn’t she?’

“‘No, sir.  A stranger—­a neutral,’ was the answer.

“‘No.  Really!  Well, tell us all about it.  What is she doing here?’

“The young man stated then that he had been told a long and complicated story of engine troubles.  But it was plausible enough from a strictly professional point of view and it had the usual features:  disablement, dangerous drifting along the shore, weather more or less thick for days, fear of a gale, ultimately a resolve to go in and anchor anywhere on the coast, and so on.  Fairly plausible.

“‘Engines still disabled?’ inquired the commanding officer.

“‘No, sir.  She has steam on them.’

“The commanding officer took his second aside.  ‘By Jove!’ he said, ’you were right!  They were holding their breaths as we passed them.  They were.’

“But the second in command had his doubts now.

“‘A fog like this does muffle small sounds, sir,’ he remarked.  ’And what could his object be, after all?’

“‘To sneak out unnoticed,’ answered the commanding officer.

“’Then why didn’t he?  He might have done it, you know.  Not exactly unnoticed, perhaps.  I don’t suppose he could have slipped his cable without making some noise.  Still, in a minute or so he would have been lost to view—­clean gone before we had made him out fairly.  Yet he didn’t.’

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Tales Of Hearsay from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.